My take on CoverItLive, now at Poynter
I'm now a contributor to Poynter.Org's E-Media Tidbits. My first piece, a follow-up report on CoverItLive.com, has just been posted. Feedback welcome.
Labels: Poynter Institute, software, tools
Lab notes on my research project in multi-threaded storytelling for journalism.
I'm now a contributor to Poynter.Org's E-Media Tidbits. My first piece, a follow-up report on CoverItLive.com, has just been posted. Feedback welcome.
Labels: Poynter Institute, software, tools
Suggested by a commenter on the Poynter piece: Check out the demo The Photosynth technology generates hyperlinks between images and texts from multiple users in an interface that can be layered or segmented in various ways. Fascinating stuff.
Labels: comments, Photosynth, Poynter Institute, social media
If you've come here after reading today's centerpiece, you've got a general overview of the work we're trying to do. It's more than a bit messy around here, but feel free to look around and offer questions, comments, critiques and suggestions. I'm actively working on components of this project that aren't online now, so I hope that you will come back from time to time.
Labels: Poynter Institute, publications
The dizzying pace of technological, cultural and economic change that has engulfed the news industry. Melissa Ludkte, editor of Nieman Reports, put it this way in the introduction to their Winter, 2006 issue, "Goodbye, Gutenberg:"
"Journalism is on a fast-paced, transformative journey, its destination still unknown. That the Web and other media technologies are affecting mightily the practice of journalism is beyond dispute. Less clear is any shared vision of what the future holds."
Labels: Adrian Holovaty, Amy Gahran, J-Lab, journalism, Mitch Stephens, Nieman Reports, Poynter Institute, statement of need, The Elements of Journalism